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This article discusses support programs included in or available for OS/360 and successors. IBM categorizes some of these programs as utilities [1] [a] and others as service aids; [2] the boundaries are not always consistent or obvious. Many, but not all, of these programs match the types in utility software.
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OPUS is an open-source software package under the GNU General Public License used for creating Open Access repositories that are compliant with the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting. It provides tools for creating collections of digital resources, as well as for their storage and dissemination.
The programs listed apply only to OS/360 and successors, not to, e.g., DOS/360 and successors, Transaction Processing Facility, VM (operating system). The article includes programs that IBM does not classify as utilities while omitting such important programs as AMASPZAP, LOADER [ a ] and SMP/E .
OS/360, officially known as IBM System/360 Operating System, [1] [2] is a discontinued batch processing operating system developed by IBM for their then-new System/360 mainframe computer, announced in 1964; it was influenced by the earlier IBSYS/IBJOB and Input/Output Control System (IOCS) packages for the IBM 7090/7094 [citation needed] and even more so by the PR155 Operating System for the ...
IBM Basic Programming Support/360 (BPS), originally called Special Support, was a set of standalone programs for System/360 mainframes with a minimum of 8 KiB of memory. BPS was developed by IBM's General Products Division in Endicott, New York. The package included "assemblers, IOCS, compilers, sorts, and utilities but no governing control ...
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Opus-CBCS – first written by Wynn Wagner III. PCBoard; PegaSys; ProBoard BBS – written by Philippe Leybaert (Belgium) QuickBBS – written by Adam Hudson, with assistance by Phil Becker. RBBS-PC; RemoteAccess – written by Andrew Milner. Renegade – written by Cott Lang until 1997. Currently maintained by T.J. McMillen since 2003.